Nvidia (NVDA) says its newest artificial intelligence (A.I.) microchip is now being produced.
Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s chief executive officer, said at the annual Consumer Electronics Show that the company’s newest A.I. hardware platform, called Vera Rubin, is in “full production.”
Nvidia’s Rubin platform incorporates six different microchips and boasts 336 billion transistors. It is designed to manage increasing A.I. computational needs and power demands.
The Vera Rubin A.I. platform is also faster to assemble and easier to service compared to Nvidia’s current Blackwell chips and related platform, said Huang.
The Rubin chip system was first announced last March and scheduled for the second half of 2026.
Huang has now confirmed that the Rubin platform will go on sale in the second half of this year, as scheduled.
Nvidia’s A.I. chip sales remain robust. On Jan. 5, the company’s Taiwanese partner Foxconn (TPE:2317) reported a 22% rise in revenue for the fourth quarter due to strong demand.
NVDA stock has gained 26% over the past 12 months to trade at $188.12 U.S. per share.